10 Iowa 154 | Iowa | 1859
The parties submitted the motion originally made to discharge the property, upon ex parte affidavits upon such a showing as they severally supposed to be sufficient to sustain their respective positions. The District Court held that this showing was not sufficient; this court held that it was. When this ruling was made, the motion being in effect and in fact sustained, there being no order or provisions given to present further affidavits, and no such order asked, it seems to us that as to this fact of the case, there remained but one thing to do by the court below, and that was to order a return of the property in accordance with the opinion and finding of this court.
Appellees in their argument claim that the question presented is one of practice, and that it is not unlike a case of a verdict for plaintiff, a motion to set it aside overruled in the District Court, and this decision reversed. And it is asked, whether in that instance the case would not be remanded for a second trial. We answer, most certainly, and for the very simple reason, that in reversing the decree of the court below, the court determines that a new or second trial should have been directed, and orders that it shall now be given. The object of the new trial is that the opinion of another jury shall be taken upon the testimony to be submitted. The finding of this court is not that one party or the- other is conclusively entitled to recover, but that under all the circumstances a new trial should be ordered. When a new trial is ordered in the court below, and this
Now if a party submits his motion for a second trial, upon the ground of newly discovered testimony, or because of the misconduct of the jury, or because of some fraud practiced by the opposite party, which, he claims, entitle him to relief, and to sustain this motion, introduces his proof whether by ex parte affidavits or otherwise, and if his motion shall be sustained in the court below and overruled here, we are aware of no case that gives the party resisting the verdict, the right to introduce still further affidavits when the cause is remanded. Nor in the case supposed is the rule changed when the motion is overruled in the District Court, and sustained in this. In either instance, nothing remains to the court below, but to proceed to enforce the judgment, or direct a new trial as may be required, by the procedendo. This case stands upon motion. The question before us at the last term, was whether the motion should or should not have been sustained. It was determined that it should have been sustained, upon the showing as made by the respective parties. The former opinion settled the whole question, and among other things that the court and not a jury was the proper tribunal to decide whether the property was seized, under such circumstances as entitled defendant to its release. Neither party was entitled to a jury trial upon the motion. Such a proceeding is unknown in a court exercising common law jurisdiction. The suggestion that the motion now under consideration was made and called up before the case was reached on the docket, we give but little, and indeed, no weight, from the fact that the court based its ruling upon the ground that the plaintiffs had a right to introduce further affidavits. It being determined that they have not this right, there is nothing left to try and nothing to do, but to carry out the mandate of this court. And this could be done either with or without a motion at any time
Tbe order overruling tbe motion is reversed.